It is bronze and life-size - not so big that it dominates the area but substantial enough to be noticed. And the fighter would not be punching or kicking but sitting in a meditative pose.

"Bruce Lee was more than a martial artist," said Ioane, 20. "He also had an amazing philosophy of life. He's a cultural icon recognized all over the world - except on this campus," where Lee studied for three years in the early 1960s.

Ioane and 20 other UW students have collected more than 1,000 signatures - including almost all the members of the men's and women's basketball teams - as part of the effort to build a Bruce Lee monument.

The statue would begin to represent the diversity of cultures currently absent in the school's collection of public-art displays, Ioane said. Almost all the several dozen statues and busts on the sprawling 700-acre campus are of white men, including the school's namesake, George Washington.

Of the 28,570 undergraduates at UW, more than 35 percent are minorities. One in 4 students is Asian American. Ioane, from Spokane, is half-Samoan.

University officials have remained noncommittal on the project, and at least one spokesman questions whether Lee's accomplishments merit a permanent memorial on a college campus.

If the students succeed, the statue would add to the growing list of Bruce Lee tributes worldwide.

In China, streets have been named and memorials erected in his honor. A huge Bruce Lee theme park is under construction in Shunde, China. In Bosnia, a bronze Lee statue was unveiled in 2005 as a symbol of healing and unity.

Lee was born in San Francisco's Chinatown and grew up in Hong Kong. His movies raised martial arts to new levels of popularity and became a source of pride for Asians and Asian Americans who had been commonly depicted as weak in the popular media.

Lee's 1973 movie "Enter the Dragon" was one of the highest-grossing films of that year and to date has grossed more than $200 million worldwide. Because he is routinely listed as one of the most recognizable pop-culture icons of the 20th century, it surprises some that Lee made only four movies. He died at age 32 of cerebral edema a few months after completing "Enter the Dragon."

He is buried in Seattle.

"I'm not for taking any of the existing statues down," said Jamil Suleman, referring to the memorials of white males on the UW campus. "I'm just for putting up statues that represent us."

Suleman, 23, graduated from UW this year. He was born in Africa to East Indian parents. The idea for a Bruce Lee monument was his. To begin the process, Suleman formed a group on campus called Bruce Lee Dedication.

As leader of the group, Suleman often gave informal tours of the school's monuments and art displays. On a recent afternoon, Suleman stood below the statue of George Washington just off the school's main plaza.

Suleman said Washington represented one version of history, but not his or that of American Indians or African Americans. "You won't find our history taught here," he said. "You have to search for it yourself."

While Lee didn't graduate from UW, he attended the school for three years and often taught martial-arts classes on the lawns just outside the student union. Lee took drama and philosophy classes, and he met his wife, Linda Cadwell, there.

Norm Arkans, a spokesman for the university, said proposals for public art must go through a lengthy, often yearslong process. "It's not random. It's not willy-nilly."

The proposal, he said, would have to emerge from a university department, go through numerous planning committees and eventually gain the approval of school administration. But even if Suleman's group were to go through all the hoops, nothing is guaranteed.

"One has to ask oneself, in terms of receiving individual recognition on campus, what claim to fame did Bruce Lee have?" Arkans said. "He became a famous personage in one genre of movies. I don't know if he had other claims to fame."

Arkans added, however, that the university would give the idea due consideration.

"As far as I know, nothing has been submitted yet," he said. "It's hard to have a response to something we haven't seen."